The past few days I acted as a software user instead of software programmer: I needed a wiki for an OSGi project. How hard can that be? After a bit of Googling I found Ward Cunningham’s site (he is the Wiki inventor) and he is hosting a wiki about wikis (This text will have a weird number of w words). Well, that site contained a very long list of wikis! I guess a wiki is on the sweet spot of being relative easy to make but with a big visual impact.
How should one choose from so many wikis? Silly enough, the implementation language seemed to be the most logical selection criteria. As you might have guessed, Java is one of my favorite languages and was therefore an obvious choice. Eagerly checking the list for OSGi based implementations turned out, however, to be a disappointment. Many wikis point out how extensible they are but none had chosen the OSGi service platform to implement their plugins; they all developed plugins in a proprietary way. There is a lot of evangelizing left to do.
Anyway, after looking at some Java implementations I found a wiki that looked very promising: FitNesse. This is not a simple wiki, it also contains an extensive testing framework. However, the wiki looked really good (not a common feature for a lot of wikis) and the code looked interesting. When I inspected the code, my hands itched … if I had been a wise men, I would have slapped them and continued. The code looked so clean and so easy to bundlefy that I could not resist. Turning it into a bundle was indeed trivial; the makers of FitNesse provided a very clean configuration and start/stop interface. I only had a slight problem with resource loading. They used the system class loader for resource loading instead of their own class loading, can’t see why, but if that was all I could fix it. Still optimistic at that moment in time.
We have an OSGi framework running that hosts the Bundle Repository, so it was attractive to install this wiki bundle on the same machine, sharing the same VM for these applications is a serious memory saver. The FitNesse bundle ran its own web server (Oh, why don’t they use OSGi technology?). This required me to map their web server through our standard web server so that we could handle authentication in one place. The standard OBR web server runs behind a firewall but is proxied through our normal web server. After trying this same trick for the wiki, it turned out that the FitNesse wiki code assumed it had the whole web server on its own; it could not handle a prefix path. I was getting this sinking feeling that I might have taken the wrong path. As a solution, I could of course run the web server directly out in the open. Unfortunately, this would require me to write the authentication code. The sinking feeling changed into hitting rock bottom. Maybe it was time to turn around and see if there were easier ways of getting this done. If I only had been a wise man …
I talked to BJ Hargrave and he recommended the MediaWiki, the wiki that powers the WikiPedia. This wiki is PHP based and run by hundreds of sites. How hard can it be to install this? Well, hard. It turned out we were running PHP 4 on our server and MediaWiki runs on PHP 5. Sigh. Well, we have rpm installed on our Linux system so we just download PHP 5 and we are on our way. Well, that is the theory. The sinking feeling returned. PHP 5 required a long list of additional uploads. Carefully trying to install a few dependent packages quickly showed that the dependency tree closely resembled the big bang. BJ had tole me there was also a PHP 4 version of the MediaWiki so I felt myself floating to the surface again, only to sink at record speed again after installing this version. Yes, it requires version 4, which happened to be a different version 4 than our version 4. The dependency fan out was not as enormous as the PHP 5, but still impressive enough for me to give up.
Simple and small became my main criteria now. So I finally found a simple and very small PmWiki based on PHP that actually had the functionality I needed, and nothing more. It was a breeze to install and did not have any nasty dependencies.
So what did I learn? Well, besides not trying to be clever, I learned that we are an industry with a problem. The last couple of years we have spent a tremendous amount of energy in formalizing the dependencies of our software artifacts; assuming that this would solve the problems of unreliable software. However, it looks like we have created another problem which is the dependency fan out. Unfortunately, virtually all known dependency mechanisms are based on versioned artifacts. Artifacts are usually a collection of functions that are not always needed. Often there is a core of highly coupled packages and a periphery of utilities and mappers to other artifacts. For example, many tool vendors today provide a mapper to run their tools under ant or maven; implicitly coupling their artifact to maven and ant.
We need to make the use of software less painful. Though we can extend our current way of working with big-bang releases (integrating many different products in a single build), in the end we need to find a way that minimizes dependencies between artifacts. The OSGi service registry with its service oriented architecture is clearly in the right direction. However, we need more. Tools that can visualize the dependencies and that can help us reduce the dependencies. Yes, with today’s tools we can actually manage the dependencies, but that does not imply that dependencies have become a positive thing. I think the OSGi is on the right way, but a lot of work is left to do.
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